Published: April 22, 2026
Last Updated: April 23, 2026

Look, a lot of games rise fast.

And disappear even faster.

Dota 2 didn’t.

It’s still here. Still competitive. Anyway… Bit of a bitch to get into if we are being honest.

And yeah, that‘s probably one of the reasons it survived and other didn‘t.

From Mod to Monster (Quick Context)

You’ve heard this part before. But still—quick recap.

Dota started as a Warcraft III mod. Early 2000s. Nothing huge at the time. Just a custom map people kept coming back to.

Then Valve picked it up.

Turned it into Dota 2. Put it on Steam.

And slowly—not instantly—it grew into something much bigger.

Not hype-driven. More like… built over time.

The International: Still Hits Different

Here’s the thing—The International isn’t just another tournament.

It feels heavier.

Even now.

By 2025, the prize pools weren’t hitting those insane $40M numbers anymore (yeah, those days were wild), but they were still big enough to matter. A lot.

Life-changing money is still on the line.

And the competition? Way tighter than before.

Western Europe, China, Southeast Asia—everyone shows up ready. There’s no “easy bracket” anymore. One mistake, you’re out. Simple.

What Actually Changed After 2023–2025?

A few things. Some obvious, some… not really.

The DPC? Basically Gone

Valve stepped back from the strict Dota Pro Circuit format.

No more rigid seasonal structure like before.

At first, it felt messy. Not gonna lie.

But then it kind of settled into something else:

  • More third-party tournaments
  • Different formats popping up
  • Less burnout for players (finally)

And honestly? It made the scene feel less robotic.

More unpredictable. Which isn’t a bad thing.

Gameplay: Still Not Forgiving

Let’s not pretend.

Dota 2 is hard.

Like—really hard.

You don’t just “pick it up.” You struggle through it.

Patches change everything. One update and suddenly:

  • a hero becomes broken
  • another one disappears completely
  • strategies you learned? useless

And yet people stick with it.

Frustrating game. But weirdly addictive.

Viewer Trends: Twitch vs YouTube (2025)

This part surprised a lot of people.

Twitch still leads—no question. Live chat, hype moments, all that.

But YouTube? It’s been catching up quietly.

Especially for:

  • replays
  • regional audiences
  • smoother streaming in some areas

Big events still pull huge numbers though. Finals? Easily hundreds of thousands watching at once. Sometimes more.

Not peak 2021 madness—but still strong.

Top 5 Highest-Earning Dota 2 Teams (All-Time)

This is where Dota still stands out—money.

TeamApprox. Earnings
Team Liquid$25M+
OG$35M+
Team Secret$20M+
PSG.LGD$18M+
Evil Geniuses$28M+

OG is still the standout here.

Back-to-back International wins? That’s rare. Like, really rare.

The Impact (This Is the Important Part)

Dota didn’t just exist in esports.

It pushed things forward.

Prize Pools Changed

Before Dota? Million-dollar tournaments were a big deal.

After Dota? Expected.

Crowdfunding Became Normal

Battle Pass. Players funding tournaments.

That idea spread everywhere later.

Competitive Depth

This isn’t a “just play well” game.

You draft. You adapt. You outthink.

And if you don’t? You lose. Fast.

Is It Still Relevant?

Yeah.

But not in the same loud way as before.

It’s not chasing trends. Not trying to simplify itself either.

It just stays… Dota.

And somehow, that’s enough.

The Problems (Because There Are Some)

Hard to Learn

New players? Most don’t last long.

Too much going on.

Not Casual-Friendly

You can’t just jump in for 10 minutes and feel good about it.

It demands time.

Structure Feels Different Now

Some people still prefer the old DPC system.

The new setup feels a bit loose. Depends on who you ask.

Final Thoughts

Dota 2 isn‘t the biggest name in the world of e-sports anymore.

But it needn‘t be.
It built something deeper than hype.

And that’s why it’s still around.

Games come. Games go.

Dota?

Still here.

Still evolving.

Still punishing mistakes… like always.